Why is an hour of sex seen as so much more exploitative than 20 hours at minimum wage?
Is that a good reason to make it so much more risky?
— Escorting Advice (@EscortingAdvice) April 8, 2016
Yes, prostitution can be exploitative and dangerous. But you don't make it less so by keeping it illegal. #sexwork https://t.co/CMBb6L1TZi
— Escorting Advice (@EscortingAdvice) March 30, 2016
In what kind of fantasy world is minimum wage "fair exchange", but hundreds of dollars an hour means you're an "exploited victim"? #sexwork
— Escorting Advice (@EscortingAdvice) January 13, 2015
My heart really goes out to those powerless, exploited victims who have to work 40 hours a week and do whatever their boss tells them.
— Escorting Advice (@EscortingAdvice) February 1, 2015
"In all paid-for sex there is, arguably, an inherently exploitative dimension". Which is arguably true for any other type of paid work, too.
— Escorting Advice (@EscortingAdvice) April 8, 2016
This editorial lays out the convincing arguments to decriminalize #sexwork. Yet ignores them because "exploitation". https://t.co/HM7UPWkKXt
— Escorting Advice (@EscortingAdvice) April 8, 2016
If you think sex for money is exploitative, how about sex for no money? #sexwork
— Escorting Advice (@EscortingAdvice) March 1, 2016
All labor in a free market economy is exploitative. Sex work, with more pay for fewer hours, can be less so. #sexwork http://t.co/ALYTiKA0jv
— Escorting Advice (@EscortingAdvice) August 21, 2015
If you pay someone $400/hour, you're "exploiting them and should be arrested". But $10/hour is apparently just fine. Because logic fail.
— Escorting Advice (@EscortingAdvice) September 20, 2014
Lots of exploited people in fast food too. Doesn't mean we should criminalize that either. #sexwork
— Escorting Advice (@EscortingAdvice) January 19, 2015
Getting paid hundreds of dollars for having sex is not intrinsically any more exploitative than a minimum wage job. For many, it's less so.
— Escorting Advice (@EscortingAdvice) July 29, 2015